SPENCER RILEY, Petitioner-Appellant, υ. VICTOR CALLOWAY, Respondent-Appellee.
No. 17-1831
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
ARGUED NOVEMBER 15, 2017 — DECIDED FEBRUARY 20, 2018
Before WOOD, Chief Judge, MANION, and KANNE, Circuit Judges.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 13-cv-02162 — Andrea R. Wood, Judge.
I. Background
The facts of the crimes are recounted in People v. Riley, 2012 IL App (1st) 101607-U. On October 30, 2007, Cedric Hudson was shot and killed while he was drinking with friends. Six bullets struck Hudson that night; three of those caused extensive damage. The investigation eventually focused on Riley, and the state charged him with six counts of first-degree murder,
Demetrice Allen testified that on October 30, 2007, he was in a vacant lot with his friends, Brown and Hudson. Allen said Riley also was present, but he could not remember if Sheeba Mackmore was with the group. Allen testified that he did not see Riley leave the vacant lot and go to his house across the street, he did not see Riley carrying a handgun, he
Frederick Brown testified at the murder trial that he saw Hudson and Mackmore conversing and at the same time saw Riley arrive on foot from his house across the street. Riley wore a hoodie—Brown described it as black, not white—and walked with his hands in the hoodie‘s pockets. Once he arrived he walked up to Hudson and told him, “Don‘t talk to my boss like that,” pulled a gun from the hoodie, and shot Hudson once. Brown said he fled immediately but heard six more shots as he ran.
Kenneth Head likewise testified that Riley had shot Hudson. Head said that Riley and Hudson had arrived in separate cars around the same time. Hudson walked toward Riley while holding up his hands. Riley then pulled a gun from the back of his pants and shot Hudson once. Head heard five
The coroner testified that Hudson had been shot multiple times in his life, including six times that night. He was able to recover three intact bullets, two bullet fragments (one with two pieces of a lead core and an aluminum jacket; the other with a copper jacket), and three of four bullets lodged in Hudson‘s body from a previous shooting. Riley stipulated to the admission of a ballistics report that is very confusing but fairly can be read as allowing for the possibility that more than one gun was used on October 30. In fact, on cross-examination Detective Gorman conceded the “possibility” that more than one gun was involved.
Detective Gorman testified that while he was transporting Riley from the police station to a court hearing on March 11, 2008, Riley asked who would be testifying against him. When Gorman replied that he could not talk about the case, Riley speculated that Mackmore had identified him as the shooter and said “he wasn‘t worried about the case against him and that dead men can‘t come to court and testify.” Riley also bragged to Gorman that the prosecution‘s witnesses would become his witnesses at trial and would say the police forced them to identify him as the shooter. Gorman conceded that no
In closing argument defense counsel asserted that “two separate calibers of ammunition” were found, thus suggesting the use of “more than one gun.” According to the state appellate court, one defense theory argued by Riley‘s lawyer—Riley had not testified—is that someone other than Riley discharged the bullets that killed Hudson. In finding Riley not guilty of first-degree murder, the jury answered a special interrogatory finding that the prosecution had not proven “that during the commission of the offense of first degree murder the defendant personally discharged a firearm that proximately caused death to another person.”
Allen, Brown, and Detective Gorman again testified at the armed habitual criminal trial before the same judge, and their testimony was nearly identical to what each said at the murder trial. But this time, instead of saying he did not recall what happened, Allen said that he did not see whether Riley had shot Hudson. The state again introduced what had been Allen‘s contradictory grand jury testimony and the statements he made when interviewed by Gorman and the assistant State‘s Attorney. And this time Brown said that, before running away, he had seen Riley shoot Hudson two or three times, not just once.
At this bench trial the parties stipulated that Riley had two, qualifying prior convictions, leaving the judge to decide only whether Riley possessed a gun,
The judge found Riley guilty. The inability to recover the gun was insignificant, the judge reasoned, because in many cases a gun is not recovered. The judge noted that two witnesses had placed Riley at the crime scene (located across the street from his home) and testified he shot Hudson. And, the judge added, Riley‘s statements to Detective Gorman before his murder trial were incriminating. The judge sentenced Riley to 15 years’ imprisonment.
On direct appeal, Riley raised the issue of collateral estoppel for the first time, relying on Ashe v. Swenson. In affirming Riley‘s conviction, the Illinois appellate court reviewed that claim for plain error. The court ruled that the state was not collaterally estopped from prosecuting Riley as an armed habitual criminal because whether he had possessed a gun was not decided by the jury at his murder trial. At issue in the murder trial was whether Riley had killed Hudson using a gun, not simply whether he possessed a gun. During closing argument in the murder case, one theory the defense had presented was that more than one person had a gun and could have shot Hudson, creating doubt whether Riley had fired the fatal shots even if he was one of the shooters. Another defense theory was that the state‘s eyewitnesses—all convicted felons—should not be believed at all. The court surmised that “a rational jury could have based its acquittal of defendant‘s murder charges on an issue and a conclusion apart from whether defendant possessed a gun.” “To determine whether
Riley then filed his
II. Discussion
On appeal Riley presses his claim that the doctrine of collateral estoppel should have prevented the state from proceeding to trial on the severed count charging him as an armed habitual criminal once the jury acquitted him of murder. To succeed under
Riley‘s claim is governed by Ashe v. Swenson, 397 U.S. 436 (1970). Collateral estoppel means that “when an issue of ultimate fact has once been determined by a valid and final judgment, that issue cannot again be litigated between the same parties in any future lawsuit.” Ashe, 397 U.S. at 443; see also Bravo-Fernandez v. United States, 137 S. Ct. 352, 358–59 (2016) (discussing Ashe).
In this court Riley repeats contentions he made to the state appellate court and the district court. He principally insists that at his murder trial the jury “conclusively resolved the issue of the murderer‘s identity” in his favor and yet “the State relitigated that precise issue at a subsequent bench trial.” Riley points out that at closing argument in the murder trial the prosecutor asserted that only one gun was used to kill Hudson. And, Riley continues, the jury announced via special interrogatory its determination that Riley did not discharge a firearm that proximately caused death. Riley asserts that the prosecutor‘s closing argument and the special interrogatory, taken together, establish that he did not possess the gun used by the murderer during the shooting. This same question was relitigated at his bench trial, says Riley, since the state presented “‘virtually the same’ identification evidence” that his “murder jury had rejected in acquitting him of murder and personal discharge.”
In pressing this theory, though, Riley tries to distance himself from his own position at the murder trial, that someone else possessed a second gun that might have been the source
Riley‘s point contradicts what occurred; whether or not his lawyer intended to suggest that Riley shot at Hudson, he was asking the jury to infer that someone else had a second gun that was used to kill Hudson—meaning that, even if Riley did possess a gun as the eyewitnesses said, his gun did not fire the bullets that killed Hudson.
Putting aside
Riley muddles things with redundant arguments in his brief, but the case is straightforward. Given the high standard
All that said, however, the question for purposes of
In rejecting the Ashe claim brought by Riley, the state appellate court cited only state cases, but that does not matter. Early v. Packer, 537 U.S. 3, 8 (2002) (per curiam) (explaining that
